I used to work at a gun store as a firearm sales associate, and we received a single firearm from either a Japanese or Korean manufacturer. I thought it was Daihatsu, but may be wrong. I am certain the manufacturer started with a D though. Anyways, it had a very unique firing system. With the hammer forward, a trigger pull would cock the hammer back at first pull, but the gun would not fire. You could either fire it with the second pull, or you could just push the hammer back forward with your thumb. There was no resistance. At that point, to fire the gun, you would pull the trigger, which would stage the hammer, then a second trigger pull would fire the gun. I have not seen this system with any other firearm, and need help figuring out who made it. Any help is appreciated.
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the only one I can think of is Daewoo
http://world.guns.ru/handguns/hg47-e.htm
I also believe you are probably referring to the Daewoo, however, you COULD fire it with the first pull, but it was more like a two-stage pull. It was a very light pull to raise the hammer back to meet the sear, and then a stiffer pull to release the sear from the mainspring. This is what they called their "triple-action" if I remember correctly. I owned one in 9mm and in .40. They were eventually traded off but I do remember liking the smooth trigger, even if I found the "triple-action" to be unnecessary.
It also had conventional double-action in that if the mainspring was not cocked, the long trigger pull would still bring back the hammer, only it would be stiffer all the way as it also had to compress the mainspring, of course.
After firing the first round with either method, each subsequent shot was standard single-action and the hammer and trigger remained in the back ready-to-fire positions. At this time, simply pushing the hammer forward with your thumb put the pistol back in the smooth, light, "triple-action" mode.